About Billy Taylor
Performer Recording
Artist Writer/Composer Broadcaster
Educator Statesman
Distinguished ambassador of the jazz community to the world-at-large, Dr. Billy Taylor was
born in 1921 in North Carolina to a musical family, where everybody played piano and
sang. Unimpressed with the sound of his own voice, Taylor decided at a young age
that he would fuse both family pursuits into one and try to "sing through the
piano." It was a fortuitous decision. Classical piano lessons with Henry
Grant and experimentation with saxophone, drums, and guitar prepared the aspiring musician
for his first professional appearance at the keyboard at the age of 13 (his take for the
performance was exactly $1.00.) At Virginia State University, where Taylor was
enrolled as a sociology major, composer/pianist Undine Moore advised Taylor that his
future was with music and piano. Heeding Moore's prescient counsel, Taylor stepped
up his music studies while in college. Then, shortly after graduation in 1942,
Taylor set out for New York City, jazz capital of the world, to see where his talent would
take him.
Performer
Taylor had been in the Big Apple
for less than a day when he found himself sitting in at Minton's, jamming with Ben Webster.
Two days later he was invited to join Webster's group. That same night he met Art Tatum,
who was soon to become his mentor. Playing with Dizzy Gillespie, Max
Roach, Don Byas, and Oscar Pettiford, the
newcomer quickly immersed himself in the local music scene. His light touch and musical
intelligence took him to Broadway where he played with Cozy Colt's Quintet for Billy
Rose's show The Seven Lively Arts, to Machito's mambo band, to gigs as an
accompanist for Kevin Spencer at the Cafe Society Uptown, and to the piano chair of the Slam
Stewart Trio.
In 1946 Taylor embarked on an eight-month tour of Europe with the Don Redman Orchestra,
the first American jazz band to visit the Continent after World War II. He returned to New
York in 1948 to form a duo with organist Bob Wyatt and to play with Billie
Holiday in a Broadway revue called Holiday on Broadway. A year later, he
was hired as the house pianist at Birdland, where he played with the all the greats,
remaining there longer than anyone else in that legendary club's history. He has gone on
to play solo and with a series of trios that rightfully belong in the pantheon of jazz
history.
Recording Artist
Having established himself as a respected performer, Taylor launched a recording career that
has spanned five decades and has produced more than two dozen albums on which he
has been the leader. His first effort as a leader, now released on CD with Errol
Garner, is called Separate Keyboards. Among Taylor's 1950s
recordings was an album he made with Candido, the legendary Cuban
drummer, who had joined his band after Dizzy Gillespie had introduced the two musicians.
Some of the other albums he recorded in the 50s were My Fair Lady Loves Jazz, Billy
Taylor at Town Hall, and Taylor Made Jazz in 1957, which featured
Duke Ellington's sidemen. The 1960s saw the release of such albums as Custom
Taylored and Brazilian Beat with the Billy Taylor Septet, as well as
I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free, whose title song is probably the
most popular tune that Taylor has ever written. Following a self-imposed recording hiatus
in the 1970s, when he focused his energy on broadcasting projects, Taylor returned to
recording with gusto in the 1980s beginning with Where You've Been¸ and
including, White Nights and Jazz in Leningrad, The Jazzmobile Allstars,
Solo, You Tempt Me, Dr. T., It's a Matter
of Pride, Homage, and culminating with We Meet Again.
In the 1990s Taylor has kept the music coming. In 1996, the indefatigable pianist signed
an exclusive recording contract with New York's Arkadia Jazz label for whom he has
completed two albums. The first, released in the summer of 1997, was Billy
Taylor Trio: Music Keeps Us Young. Expected out in 1998 is Billy
Taylor: Ten Fingers One Voice, only the second solo album of Billy's career.
He has several other projects in the works, including an educational video and new
enhanced CDs.
Writer
and Composer
In addition to playing and
recording, Taylor is a gifted writer about music. In 1949, he published his first
book, an instructional manual for be-bop piano. By that time, he had also begun to publish
the first of what was to become a body of nearly 300 songs, including the aforementioned
"I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel To Be Free," which was selected by the New York
Times as "One of the Great Songs of the Sixties," and is presently featured
as the anthem of Rob Reiner's film, Ghosts of the Mississippi, playing during the
opening and closing credits.
Impressed by the range and depth of his work, classical musicians have asked Taylor to
compose symphonic works for jazz piano. Commissioned by the Atlanta Symphony, Taylor's
"Peaceful Warrior", a work dedicated to the memory Dr. Martin Luther
King, was premiered under the direction of Robert Shaw. "Make a Joyful Noise,"
a six-part suite inspired by the 97th Psalm, follows the tradition of the Ellington Sacred
Concerts.
Other notable composition credits include "For Rachel" a dance suite
which resulted from collaboration with choreographer Rachel Lamport, the score for Wole
Soyinka's off-Broadway hit, The Lion and the Jewel, and "Suite for
Jazz Piano and Orchestra," commissioned by Maurice Abravenal and the Utah
Symphony. Other orchestral works include "Impromptu," "Conversations,"
"Theme and Variations"-commisioned by the National Symphony and "Step
Into My Dream," written for the David Parsons Dance Co. His most recent
composition, "Homage," was written for the Julliard String Quartet
and was nominated for a Grammy.
Broadcaster
Accomplished as he is on the piano, as a recording artist, and as a composer, Taylor is
perhaps best known as the public face of jazz, a man who has spent much of his life
bringing jazz to the airwaves. In the 1960s, alarmed by the reorientation of his record
company, Capitol Records, toward upstart rock & rollers, (the Beatles had just signed
on), Taylor decided to forget recording for a while and devote himself instead to radio and
television.
His success on WLIB in New York City, as a performer and host, brought him to WNEW, the
city's top independent station. In the 1970s Taylor began an extended engagement as the
musical director of the David Frost Show, a variety show whose guests included the
likes of Benny Goodman, Louis Armstrong, Count Basie, and Buddy Rich, who came to play and
be interviewed on the show. Involved at various levels with several different radio and
television stations, Taylor somehow found time to produce the Billy Taylor Show on
Channel 47. Later on he served as musical director for Tony Brown's Black Journal
Tonight and became host of National Public Radio's Jazz Alive and the 13-week
series, Taylor Made Piano, both of which won Peabody Awards.
Taylor's career in broadcasting reached its summit in the early 1980s when he was hired
as the arts reporter for the CBS Sunday Morning with Charles Kuralt. To
date, he has profiled more than two hundred and fifty artists for the program.
Educator
Sparked by his experience in the late 1950s at a Yale University conference which
explored ways to improve musical instruction in public schools, Taylor has never stopped
informing the public about the idiom he loves. His first endeavor in broadcasting was
essentially an educational one. Aired in 1958, the 13-part series was called The
Subject is Jazz, and was the first history of jazz produced by the new National
Educational Television Network (NET). The featured band was comprised of Doc Severinson, Tony
Scott, Jimmy Cleveland, Mundell Lowe, Earl May, Eddie Safranski, Ed Thigpen, Ossie
Johnson, and Taylor himself. Guests on the series included Duke Ellington, Lee Konitz,
Langston Hughes, Aaron Copeland, and Bill Evans.
His pedagogical impulses now awakened, Taylor continued to look for ways to teach people
about jazz. After serving as a visiting professor at Howard University, the Manhattan
School of Music, U.C. Irvine, North Carolina Central College, Shaw University, and many
other colleges and universities, and as an adjunct professor at C.W. Post, Billy earned
his doctorate from the University of Massachusetts, in the mid 1970s. He is now the
Wilber O. Barret Professor of Music there. He lectures widely and gives master-classes and
seminars.
In addition, he was the founder of Jazzmobile, a unique outreach organization which
brings free concerts and music clinics to thousands in the inner-city.
Statesman
Beyond the realm of the media, Taylor's passion for jazz and his talents as a communicator
brought him into prominence in public service circles. Dr. Taylor was appointed by the
president to the National Council for the Arts, the first jazz musician since Duke
Ellington to be so honored. He was only the third jazz musician to receive the National
Medal of the Arts. The others were Dizzy Gillespie and Ella Fitzgerald. He has led State
Department-sponsored tours to Hungary, the Middle East, and Latin America. Currently, he
is adviser for jazz at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, and the
presenter of an on-going series, "Mentors and Masters," at the Metropolitan
Museum of Art in New York.
Multi-dimensional and very accomplished, Billy Taylor seems to draw energy from his own
activity. Having just celebrated his 75th birthday and marked more than 50 years in jazz,
he shows no signs of slowing down. His passion is still alive, and his piano still sings.